Spotlight: The Queen of Fives by Alex Hay

Publication Date: January 21, 2025

Graydon House Hardcover

A confidence scheme, when properly executed, will follow five movements:

I. The Mark II. The Intrusion. III. The Ballyhoo. IV. The Knot. V. All In.

There may be many counter-strikes along the way, for such is the nature of the game; it contains so many sides, so many endless possibilities...

Nothing is quite as it seems in Victorian high society in this clever novel set against the most magnificent wedding of the season, as a mysterious heiress sets her sights on London's most illustrious family

1898. Quinn le Blanc, London’s most talented con woman, has five days to pull off her most ambitious plot yet: trap a highly eligible duke into marriage and lift a fortune from the richest family in England.

Masquerading as the season’s most enviable debutante, Quinn puts on a brilliant act that earns her entrance into the grand drawing rooms and lavish balls of high society—and propels her straight into the inner circle of her target: the charismatic Kendals. Among those she must convince are the handsome bachelor heir, the rebellious younger sister, and the esteemed duchess eager to see her son married.

But the deeper she forges into their world, the more Quinn finds herself tangled in a complicated web of love, lies, and loyalty. The Kendals all have secrets of their own, and she may not be the only one playing a game of high deception...

Excerpt

A confidence scheme, when properly executed, will follow five movements in close and inviolable order:

I. The Mark.

Wherein a fresh quarry is perceived and made the object of the closest possible study.

II. The Intrusion.

Wherein the quarry’s outer layers must be pierced, his world peeled open…

III. The Ballyhoo.

Where a golden opportunity shall greatly tempt and dazzle the quarry…

IV. The Knot.

Wherein the quarry is encircled by his new friends, and naysayers are sent gently on their way…

V. All In.

Where all commitments are secured, and the business is happily—and irrevocably—concluded.

A coda: there may be many counterstrikes along the way, for such is the nature of the game; it contains so many sides, so many endless possibilities…

Rulebook—1799. 

Day One

The Mark

1

Quinn

Five days earlier

Here was how it began. Four miles east of Berkeley Square, a few turns from Fashion Street and several doors down from the synagogue, stood a humble old house in Spitalfields. Four floors high, four bays across. Rose-colored shutters, a green trim to the door. A basement kitchen hidden from the street, and a colony of house sparrows nesting in the eaves, feasting on bread crusts and milk pudding scrapings.

On the first floor, behind peeling sash windows, stood Quinn Le Blanc.

She changed her gloves. She had a fine selection at her disposal, per her exalted rank in this neighborhood—chevrette kid, mousquetaire, pleated gloves for daytime, ridged ones for riding, silk-lined, fur-edged. All shades, too—dark, tan, brandy, black, mauve. No suede, of course. And no lace: nothing that could snag. The purpose of the glove was the preservation of the skin. Not from the sun, not from the cold.

From people.

She pulled on the French kid—cream-colored with green buttons—flexed her fingers, tested the grip. For she was the reigning Queen of Fives, the present mistress of this house; the details were everything.

“Mr. Silk?” she called from the gaming room. “Have you bolted the rear doors?”

His voice came back, querulous, from the stairs. “Naturally I have.” Then the echo of his boots as he clumped away.

The gaming room breathed around her. It was hot, for they kept a good strong fire burning year-round, braving incineration. But now she threw cold water on the grate, making the embers hiss and smoke. She closed the drapes, which smelled as they always did: a tinge of tobacco and the sour tint of mildew. Something else, too: a touch of cognac, or absinthe—one of the prior queens had enjoyed her spirits.

Quinn examined the room, wondering if she should lock away any valuables for the week. Of course, she had no fears of not returning on schedule, in triumph, per her plan—but still, she was venturing into new and dangerous waters. Some prudence could serve her well. The shelves were crammed with objects: hatboxes, shoeboxes, vinegars, perfume bottles, merino cloths, linen wrappings. But then she decided against it; she despised wasting time. The most incriminating, valuable things were all stored downstairs, in the bureau.

The bureau contained every idea the household ever had, the schemes designed and played by generations of queens. It stood behind doors reinforced with iron bolts, windows that were bricked up and impassable. It was safe enough, for now.

“Quinn?” Silk’s voice floated up the stairs. “We must be punctual.”

“We will be,” she called back with confidence.

Confidence was all they had going for them at the Château these days.

The Château. It was a pompous name for a humble old house. But that was the point, wasn’t it? It gave the place a sense of importance in a neighborhood that great folk merely despised. There were tailors and boot finishers living on one side, cigar makers and scholars on the other, and a very notorious doss-house at the end of the road. Quinn had lived in it nearly all her life, alongside Mr. Silk.

Quinn descended the creaking staircase, flicking dust from the framed portraits lined along the wall. They depicted the Château’s prior queens, first in oils, later in daguerreotype, with Quinn’s own picture placed at the foot of the stairs. Hers was a carte de visite mounted in a gilt frame, adorned with red velvet curtains. In it, Quinn wore a thick veil, just like her predecessors. She carried a single game card in one hand, and she was dressed in her inaugural disguise—playing the very splendid “Mrs. Valentine,” decked in emerald green velvet, ready to defraud the corrupt owners of the nearby Fairfield Works. She was just eighteen, and had already secured the confidence of the Château’s other players—and she was ready to rule.

That was eight years ago.

Quinn rubbed the smeared glass with her cuff. The house needed a good spring clean. She’d given up the housekeeper months ago; even a scullery maid was too great an expense now. Glancing through the rear window, she caught her usual view of the neighborhood—rags flapping on distant lines, air hazed with smoke. The houses opposite winked back at her, all nets and blinds, their disjointed gardens tangled and wild. She fastened the shutters, checking the bolts.

Silk was waiting by the front door. “Ready?” He was wearing a bulky waistcoat, his cravat ruffled right up to his chin. His bald head shone in the weak light.

Quinn studied him, amused. “What have you stuffed yourself with?”

“Strips of steel, if you must know.”

“In your jacket?”

“Yes.”

“For what reason?”

“My own protection. What else?”

Quinn raised a brow. “You’re developing a complex.”

“We’re living in a violent age, Le Blanc. A terribly violent age.”

Silk was forever clipping newspaper articles about foreign agitators, bombs being left in fruit baskets on station platforms.

“Stay close to me, then,” Quinn said, hauling open the front door, squinting in the light.

Net curtains twitched across the road. This was a quiet anonymous street, and the location of the Château was a closely guarded secret, even among their kind. But the neighbors kept their eyes on the Château. Nobody questioned its true ownership: the deeds had been adulterated too many times, sliced out of all official registers. In the 1790s, it was inhabited by an elusive Mrs. B—(real name unknown). Some said she’d been a disgraced bluestocking, or an actress, or perhaps a Frenchwoman on the run—a noble comtesse in disguise! She caught the neighborhood’s imagination; they refashioned her in their minds. B—became “Blank,” which in time became “Le Blanc.” Her house was nicknamed le Château. Smoke rose from the chimneys; queer characters came and went; the lights burned at all hours. Some said Madame Le Blanc had started a school. Others claimed it was a brothel.

In fact, it was neither.

It was something much cleverer.

The Queen of Fives. They breathed the title with reverence on the docks, down the coastline. A lady with a hundred faces, a thousand voices, a million lives. She might spin into yours if you didn’t watch out… She played a glittering game: lifting a man’s fortune with five moves, in five days, before disappearing without a trace.

The sun was inching higher, turning the sky a hard mazarine blue. “Nice day for it,” Quinn said, squeezing Silk’s arm.

Silk peered upward. “I think not.” He’d checked his barometer before breakfast. “There’s a storm coming.”

Quinn could feel it, the rippling pleasure down her spine. “Better and better,” she replied. “Now, come along.”

They made an unassuming pair when they were out in public. An older gentleman in a dark and bulky overcoat, with a very sleek top hat. A youngish woman in dyed green furs, with a high collar and a sharp-tilted toque. He with his eyes down, minding his step. She with her face veiled, gloves gripped round an elegant cane. Always listening, watching, rolling dice in their minds.

Silk and Quinn had a single clear objective for the day. Audacious, impossible, outrageous—but clear. He showed her his appointment book: Three p.m.—Arrive in ballroom, Buckingham Palace, en déguisé.

“In disguise? Doesn’t that go without saying?”

“You tell me. Has your costume been delivered?”

“Not yet. But we have a more serious impediment.”

“Oh?” he asked her.

“I’ve still not received my invitation card to the palace.”

They turned into Fournier Street. Silk tutted. “I’ve dealt with that. Our old friend at the Athenaeum Club will oblige you.”

“You’re quite sure? We’ve never cut it so fine before.”

“Well, you might need to prod him a little.”

“Just a little?”

“The very littlest bit, Quinn.”

Unnecessary violence was not part of their method. But persuasion—well, that was essential. Let’s call a spade a spade: the Château was a fraud house, a cunning firm, a swindler’s palace ruled by a queen. It made its business by cheating great men out of their fortunes. In the bureau stood the Rulebook, its marbled endpapers inscribed with each queen’s initials, setting the conditions of their games.

And this week the Queen of Fives would execute the most dangerous game of her reign.

Quinn paused outside the Ten Bells. “Very well. We can’t afford any slips. I’ll go to the Athenaeum now. Anything else?”

Silk shook his head. “Rien ne va plus.” No more bets.

They gripped hands. He gave her his usual look: a fond gaze, then a frown. “Play on, Le Blanc.”

She grinned at him in return. “Same to you, old friend.”

They parted ways.

And the game began.

Excerpted from THE QUEEN OF FIVES by Alex Hay. Copyright © 2025 by Alex Hay. Published by Graydon House, an imprint of HarperCollins. 

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About the Author

ALEX HAY grew up in the United Kingdom in Cambridge and Cardiff, and has been writing as long as he can remember. He studied history at the University of York, and wrote his dissertation on female power at royal courts, combing the archives for every scrap of drama and skulduggery he could find. He has worked in magazine publishing and the charity sector and lives with his husband in London. His debut, The Housekeepers won the Caledonia Novel Award, and was named a Best Book of the Summer by Reader’s Digest, The Washington Post, Good Housekeeping, Harper’s Bazaar, and others. His second novel, The Queen of Fives, publishes in January 2025. Alex lives with his husband in South East London.

Connect:

Author Website: https://alexhaybooks.com/ 

X/Twitter: https://x.com/alexhaybooks?lang=en 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alexhaybooks/?hl=en

Spotlight: Artificial Agent by J.W. JARVIS

Captured, tortured, and left for dead. Pieced back together with experimental tech, can this courageous soldier prevent a cataclysmic war?

Loyalty runs through Michael Cooling’s veins. Abandoned by his father as a kid and devoted to his mother, the highly decorated Navy SEAL gladly leads a mission to extract two Ukrainian generals held by Russia. But after falling into the hands of a brutal Russian officer and nearly killed, the heroic patriot ends up comatose in a hospital bed… and unknowingly paralyzed.

Determined to escape a wheelchair-bound existence, the wounded warrior undergoes surgery to integrate an untested hi-tech endoskeleton into his ravaged human flesh. And as he trains tirelessly to adapt to his new synthetic body, he develops an unprecedented strength and speed he hopes will help him crush those who would see the USA fall.

Yet as old hatreds come home to roost, will his newfound powers be enough to stop the world being brought to its knees?

Artificial Agent is a gripping technothriller. If you like resilient heroes, vicious villains, and exploring what’s truly important, then you’ll love J.W. Jarvis’s nail-biting tale.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback

About the Author

J.W. Jarvis: J.W. Jarvis lives in sunny California but is originally from the suburbs of the Windy City. When he’s not thinking of ways to create inspiring characters and nonstop action stories, you can find him reading, golfing, traveling, or just sipping a hot vanilla latte. Visit J.W. Jarvis at www.authorjwjarvis.com.

Follow J.W. Jarvis on social media: Facebook: authorjwjarvis | Twitter: @authorjwjarvis | Instagram: @authorjwjarvis

Spotlight: A Curse of Thorns and Slumber by Marie-Hélène Lebeault

Genre: Clean Romantasy Fairytale Retelling

A cursed prince. A dangerous dream world. A girl who holds the key to their salvation.

One kiss could awaken a kingdom… or doom it to eternal darkness.

When a reluctant thief with the power to control thorns is forced to break an ancient curse, she must risk entering the dangerous Dreamplane to save a cursed prince—but some magic comes with a price too deadly to pay.

In the kingdom of Solstraea, where the skies are gray and thorns rule the land, a centuries-old curse has imprisoned Prince Kael in an eternal sleep. Only one person can break the spell—Liora Thornhand, a thief with a rare, dangerous gift she never wanted.

Captured and offered a deal she cannot refuse, Liora must venture into the deadly Dreamplane to find Kael’s heart, hidden deep within a magical rose. But as she battles nightmare creatures and faces her own dark past, she learns that waking the prince might cost her more than just her freedom—it might cost her life.

In a world filled with twisted thorns, cursed roses, and dangerous shadows, Liora will have to decide: will she risk everything to save a kingdom she doesn’t belong to, or will she let it fall into eternal darkness?

Perfect for fans of Sarah J. Maas and Brigid Kemmerer, "A Curse of Thorns and Slumber" is a spellbinding mix of dark fantasy, romance, and a daring quest through a world where magic is as treacherous as it is beautiful.

A Curse of Thorns and Slumber is the second book in the Legends Reborn series. It is a no-spice fantasy romance adventure. Books can be read in any order.

Excerpt

Liora wound her way through the maze, her eyes darting warily over the roses as she passed. The thorns seemed to move, ever so slightly, as if they were alive, reaching toward her. She kept her distance, but the path ahead offered no clear direction, and she had no idea how long she had been walking.

Time, like everything else here, felt strange.

After what felt like hours, the thorny walls finally opened up into a wide clearing. At the center stood a towering rose bush, larger than any Liora had seen. Its twisted branches arched high into the sky, and nestled deep within the tangle of vines was a single glowing rose.

Her heart skipped a beat. That must be it.

But before she could take a step forward, something stirred at the base of the rose bush.

A figure, half-hidden in the shadows, stood slowly. He was tall, with dark hair falling just below his chin, dressed in clothes that looked like they belonged to another time—worn, faded, but finely made. His eyes, however, were the most striking—icy blue, with a depth that made Liora’s breath catch for a moment.

She recognized him immediately. Prince Kael.

But there was something wrong. He looked… distant. His eyes were sharp, but they seemed to look through her, not at her.

“You,” he said, his voice low and cold. “Who are you?”

Liora froze. She had been prepared for hostility, but something about the way he looked at her unsettled her. She straightened, forcing a smirk. “A thief, apparently. The mages sent me to break your curse.”

Kael’s expression hardened. He stepped forward, his gaze narrowing. “Another one,” he muttered, half to himself. “How many more are they going to send before they realize it’s useless?”

Liora crossed her arms. “So, I’m not the first. Good to know.”

Kael didn’t answer. He looked her over, his eyes flicking to the pouch at her side where she still kept the stolen jewels—though they felt utterly useless here. “Why should I believe you?”

“I don’t care if you do,” Liora shot back, her patience already thinning. “I’m not here for you, anyway. I’m here for the rose.”

At this, Kael’s eyes darkened, a flicker of something unreadable passing over his face. “The rose,” he repeated, his voice softer now, almost bitter. “Of course.”

Liora took a step toward the rose bush, but Kael moved suddenly, blocking her path. His eyes were sharper now, more focused. “You think it’s that simple?” he asked, his voice low. “That you can just come here and take it?”

She frowned, her pulse quickening. “Isn’t that the idea?”

Kael’s lips curled into a humorless smile. “It’s never that simple.”

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About the Author

Marie-Hélène is a Canadian author. She writes young adult quest and adventure stories rooted in fantasy, magic, and time travel. With important coming-of-age lessons at the core of her writing, children and young adults alike will revel in the fantastical journeys of her characters. When not immersed in magic and mystery, you’ll find Marie-Hélène hiking, cycling, or lying on the beach with a good book.

Website * Facebook * X * Instagram * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads

Spotlight: The Loathe Boat by Cindy Dorminy

Publication date: January 20th 2025

Genres: Adult, Comedy, Contemporary, Romance

Synopsis:

The Loathe Boat is about to set sail! All aboard!

Chrissy Parks already has one failed marriage under her belt, and despite being on good terms with her ex, she has no desire to put another ring on her left hand anytime soon. Life is good with Deacon, her amazing boyfriend, so there’s no need to rock the boat.

Deacon Youngblood has other plans. He pops the question just days before they plan to set sail on a role-playing-themed cruise. When Chrissy flips out and turns down his proposal, he begins to think that she may not be over her ex.

The situation escalates into a breakup, but neither will relinquish their cruise ticket. Chrissy climbs aboard the Sovereign of the Sea with the goal of clearing her head and enjoying all the cruise has to offer. Deacon follows with the hope of winning her back.

Chrissy has a nagging feeling that Deacon is hiding something from her. And he’s not the only one vying for her attention. Chrissy must search her heart and decide who she wants. Or maybe she should abandon ship. as we age.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Cindy Dorminy writes about love when it’s least expected. Quirky dialogue and sassy, southern heroines are a must in her romances. When she’s not in her she-shed working on her next novel, she enjoys walking her dog, gardening, and weightlifting. She shares her house with her musician husband, an awesome daughter, and a miniature dachshund who would eat all the food if he could figure out how to open the refrigerator. She resides in Nashville, TN, where live music can be heard everywhere, even at the grocery store.

Connect:

https://www.cindydwrites.com/

https://www.facebook.com/authordorminy

https://www.instagram.com/cindydorminy/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15101100.Cindy_Dorminy

Spotlight: Dancing Woman by Elaine Neil Orr

It’s 1963 and Isabel Hammond is an expat who has accompanied her agriculture aid worker husband to Nigeria, where she is hoping to find inspiration for her art and for her life. Then she meets charismatic local singer Bobby Tunde, and they share a night of passion that could upend everything. Seeking solace and distraction, she returns to her painting and her home in a rural village where she plants a lemon tree and unearths an ancient statue buried in her garden. She knows that the dancing female figure is not hers to keep, yet she is reluctant to give it up, and soon, she notices other changes that make her wonder what the dancing woman might portend. 

Against the backdrop of political unrest in Nigeria, Isabel’s personal situation also becomes precarious. She finds herself in the center of a tide of suspicion, leaving her torn between the confines of her domestic life and the desire to immerse herself in her art and in the culture that surrounds her. The expat society, the ancient Nigerian culture, her beautiful family, and even the statue hidden in a back room—each trouble and beguile Isabel. Amid all of this, can she finally become who she wants to be?

Excerpt

Kufana, Nigeria 

*****

February 1963

The message from her husband was perfectly logical, as was always the case. Nick would stay through the weekend near Kafanchan where he was planting an acre in Neem trees. There was no sense driving home for two nights only to return Monday. 

It was too early to be planting. In the heat of the dry season, birds ceased their movement midmorning. The trees would have to be watered. But Nick was eager. He had left a week ago. Eventually her young husband meant to plant several acres. Isabel let her gaze run along the bougainvillea hedge that bordered her yard. 

Inside, she picked up pen and paper. Message received. I do understand how important the project is. And yet, she wrote and marked through those last two words. What would she say? And yet, I long for a journey, a night of love, a discovery. None of that was quite right or sufficient, and all of it made her sound trite. She signed, Yours, Isabel before folding the paper and slipping it into the same dust stained envelope the courier had delivered to her. A pearl of anger pulsed at the back of her skull. How could he be so forgetful of their plans? Back in the yard, she handed the young motorcyclist the envelope. He wore a pale blue shirt embroidered around the neck in yellow thread, and her eyes followed the sinuous motion of the design. 

She pulled her gaze from the man’s chest. “Safe travels.” He revved the engine. The machine chugged and coughed, and then the courier was gone in a swirl of dust and fumes. 

Isabel glanced over her parched front yard. For weeks, she had been anticipating the Valentine’s party sponsored by the International Women’s Club in the lovely city of Kaduna. The invitation had arrived early in the New Year, bearing a photograph of the pop star, Bobby Tunde. He sat at a piano, in a garden of potted plants and brass instruments, a slightly squashed, gold cap on his head, his sideways glance and neatly trimmed beard disastrously alluring. He reminded her a little of Harry Belafonte, whom her parents, to her great surprise, adored. She imagined Tunde’s music as an array of color, heavy in blue and orange.

In Kaduna, there would be a feast, dancing, and beer. Nick had forgotten all about it, though Isabel had made a new dress, green as a lime, with a V-neck and a gathered skirt. She had finished the hem and sleeves yesterday, sitting by the window to catch the breeze. The dress fell perfectly to her knees and brushed lightly against her thighs. In her impatience, she had worn it down the lane to purchase a can of Spam for her dinner. She’d even found small potatoes to add to her solitary meal. Now she would not attend the party because her husband had the car. 

Suddenly a boy in a faded tunic stood before her. His eyes were large, his forehead brightened to silver in the sun. He held a bird captured by a bit of twine fastened tight around its tiny, black feet. In his other hand, he held a woven basket, perhaps the bird’s cage. “Please, buy,” he said. 

The bird seemed all tuckered out, its feathers wilted, eyes dim. Isabel would not keep a bound bird nor a bird in a cage. 

“No,” she said, still annoyed with Nick, with the heat, with the lonely weekend to come. 

Now the boy looked as listless as the bird, his eyes blank. He shook his head but with little passion. An image of a chained bird floated into Isabel’s mind. A goldfinch. She had studied it in art history at Hollins, back in Virginia. She had loved and hated the painting. The gold highlights on the bird’s feathers stopped her breath, but she despised the chain. How could an artist paint a bound bird? She was sure she would have let it go. 

At times, Isabel felt she could see beneath the surface of things. She had always felt so. “How much?” she said.

The boy revived and stood upright. “Six pence,” he said.

For the second time this morning, Isabel mounted the steps to the front porch and moved into the house. She returned with several coins and placed a sixpence in the boy’s hand. 

He set the basket at her feet as if it was now Isabel’s, and then he reached for her hand, to transfer the twine and the poor attached bird into her ownership. “Wait,” she said. She wetted her thumb, ran it over the poor bird’s head and down its feathered back several times until a skim of dust was lifted and bright green feathers, and even a band of gold on its wing, emerged. “It’s a beauty,” she said, and the boy smiled. “Untie it,” she said. “Set it here.” She placed a hand on the concrete pillar at the base of the porch. 

The boy did as she said. 

The bird teetered. It took a few halting steps. It shook itself out, catching the sun in its feathers. It bobbed its head as if trying to remember something. And then it took wing, across the road and into a tall hardwood. 

Isabel felt golden. 

“Now,” she said. “Don’t catch any more birds. I will give you two shillings. Go to the market and purchase a bucket. You can make more money fetching water from the stream.” She handed him the coins. 

He looked at the wealth in his upturned palm. “Thank you,” he said and bowed slightly. At the first bend in the road, he looked back and waved. He might spend the money on a ball, a BIC pen. That wouldn’t be so bad. Isabel had faith in him.

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About the Author

Elaine Neil Orr is the author of five books, including the novels A Different Sun and Swimming Between Worlds She was born and grew up in Nigeria, the daughter of missionary parents, and most of her writing is grounded in both the American South and the Nigerian South. She is a professor of literature at N.C. State University and serves on the faculty of the Brief-Residency MFA in Writing Program at Spalding University. She lives in Raleigh. https://www.elaineneilorr.com/

Spotlight: A Beautiful Couple by Leslie Wolfe

Genre: Psychological Thriller, Suspense 

Her husband killed someone. She’s the only witness.

Amanda Davis has it all: a beautiful home, a thriving career, and a charismatic husband who is the darling of television news. But when Paul kills someone in a disturbing accident, Amanda’s perfect world shatters. Pulled into a web of manipulation, deceit, and dark secrets, she becomes his unwilling accomplice, trapped in a twisted, dangerous existence that tests the limits of love and loyalty.

As the weight of the secret bears down, Amanda begins to see a side of Paul she’s never known—cold, manipulative, and dangerously unpredictable. His charm fades, replaced by a chilling determination to keep their secret at any cost. The walls are closing in: the police are investigating, strange events unsettle her, and Paul’s behavior grows more menacing by the day.

Trapped and isolated, Amanda realizes she’s not just covering up an accident—she’s become a prisoner in her own life. With her sanity and safety on the line, she must decide: How far will she go to escape the web of lies? And who can she trust when the one person she thought she knew best becomes a threat?

In this gripping, twisty psychological thriller, Amazon Charts and Kindle #1 best-selling author Leslie Wolfe masterfully crafts a tale of chilling deception, dangerous secrets, and the terrifying lengths we go to in order to keep up appearances. Perfect for fans of Freida McFadden, Lisa Jewell, and Jeneva Rose, A Beautiful Couple will leave you breathless and questioning everything you thought you knew about love, loyalty, and trust.

Excerpt

1

AMANDA DAVIS

I killed a man.

The surreal words fill my mind, echoing in tremors that weaken my body. Wide-eyed, I stare at the body lying in a motionless heap at the bottom of the stairs, disbelief clinging to me in scattered thoughts and anxious breaths. As reality starts setting in, I gasp silently, covering my mouth to stifle a sob.

It can’t be true. He can’t be dead. 

But I can see it’s all too real. In his neck, twisted and crooked sideways to an impossible posture. In the sickening crack of broken bones that sounded just as he landed on the hardwood floor after bouncing down the steep flight of stairs. In the pooling blood that’s slowly seeping from his head, gleaming burgundy under the yellowish light coming from the floor lamp by the door. 

A noise outside startles me. Someone’s coming. I freeze in place at the top of the stairs, my fingers white-knuckled on the handrail as the footsteps draw closer. Then, in the dark frame of the living room window, the profile of a woman appears, her face dimly lit as she passes by. Without turning her head to look inside. 

I breathe. 

But I also realize someone could’ve seen what happened. A passerby. A neighbor. Anyone. 

I force some air into my lungs to steel my fraught nerves. Still holding on to the handrail for support, I climb down the stairs, careful not to slip, as if his fall could repeat somehow and seal my fate in vengeful symmetry, my body next to his. I hold my breath as I approach, senselessly hoping he’s still alive, yet fearing it. When I breathe again, the metallic smell of blood invades my nostrils, filling me with dread. 

I rush to the window and close the blinds, then peek outside between two slats. The street is eerily deserted and still. For now. 

Crouching by his side, I feel for a pulse with frozen fingers. Touching his skin sears me, prickling the back of my head as if he could snap out of death and grab my shaky wrist. 

There’s no pulse. 

His golf shirt is soaked with blood at the collar and smells faintly of aftershave, although his face 

shows a two-day stubble. His skull is fractured where it must’ve hit the edge of a step, the indentation clearly visible through his buzz-cut hair, despite the bleeding laceration. Reluctantly, I slip my fingers sideways and trace his neck, wincing as I find the protruding vertebra—a sign of a fractured cervical spine that resulted in a fatal spinal cord injury. 

He died the moment he hit the floor.

I’m more than qualified to come to that conclusion. It doesn’t change how I feel, though. Unsure of myself. Scared. Unsteady. My heart is racing, and my chest tightening, as if the walls of the room are drawing closer and closer, about to squeeze the life out of me.

The sound of an approaching car makes me rush to the window. It doesn’t slow down until it reaches the corner and turns, tinting the darkness of the small, suburban street with hues of bright taillight red. 

I turn on my heels and stare at the body, unsure what to do.

His eyes are still open, as if looking straight through me with hypnotizing, dilated pupils. It chills the blood in my veins. I crouch down and close his eyelids swiftly, barely touching him with the tips of my shaking fingers—eager to put some distance between me and him. I stand quickly and step back, unable to take my eyes off of him. Part of me still expects him to get up and grab me, slam me against the wall, then put his hands around my throat and squeeze until my world goes dark. Just as his is now. 

But he doesn’t move. He’s dead. 

I killed him.

The enormity of what I’ve done weighs heavily on my heart. How could I let this happen? 

It seems I had no choice, and yet, the truth is that I had a choice, and I made the wrong one. That life-altering choice didn’t happen a few moments ago, when I pushed him down the stairs. 

No. 

It happened earlier. Much earlier. 

And now, I have to deal with the consequences of what I’ve done. 

My first thought is to run, to put as much distance as I possibly can between me and the body lying on the blood-soaked floor. But there’s no running away from this. Not right now. Not without a plan. 

Walking backward, my heel stops against the bottom step of the staircase and I nearly trip. I let myself slide down and sit on a step. For a moment of respite, my elbows rest on my shaky knees and my face lands in my hands, hiding from the grim sight. 

Perhaps I can stall things for a few days before they come for me, because I know they will. Clinging to that glimmer of hope, my mind starts working. I raise my weary head and look around, looking for anything I could use to buy myself some time. There isn’t much. 

One thing’s certain: I have to get rid of the body. 

I need help. 

He’s massive, at least six-three and well-built, weighing perhaps two-forty. It’s what I liked about 

him…the strength, the agility, the apparent stamina and self-confidence. However, I’m not nearly that tall, and I’m one-forty at the most, on a bad, bloated day. I reach for his leg to test my strength, but stop before touching his ankle. It’s pointless to even try. At work, it takes six of us to transfer a patient of his size from a stretcher onto a bed. 

I take out my phone and turn it on. The bitten apple lights up white on the black screen, then vanishes, making room for a picture of my son. Tristan just turned nine; we took this pic last summer on the Santa Monica Pier. Seeing his piercing blue eyes touched by his enchanted smile brings the threat of tears to my own eyes. 

What if I lose him? What if they lock me up and I never see him again? 

I can’t bear the thought of that. A hollow, burning ache opens up in my chest, swallowing everything. 

No… I can’t lose my son. That won’t happen. Whatever it takes.

I push the grim thoughts away and breathe deeply while typing in my phone’s passcode. Tristan’s face disappears off the screen. 

It will be all right. But the words I’ve told myself fail to reassure me.

As the screen fills with apps, I realize there’s only one person I can call for the kind of help I need. The one person I’d rather never call or see again. My fingers falter while retrieving the name from the contacts list. 

Hesitating, I give the fallen body another look, desperately wondering if there’s any other way. 

There isn’t. 

I brace myself for the questions that are about to come my way like machine gun bullets, merciless and cold and ripping through me in rapid-fire sequence. 

Then, I make the call, knowing that as soon as I share what I’ve done, there will be no turning back. My entire existence will be at the mercy of someone else. Someone I know I can’t trust. 

As the line rings in my ear, I reflect bitterly on the last few weeks, and on everything that’s happened. 

I never wanted any of this. 

All I wanted was a damned divorce.

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About the Author

Leslie Wolfe is a bestselling author whose novels break the mold of traditional thrillers. She creates unforgettable, brilliant, strong women heroes who deliver fast-paced, satisfying suspense, backed up by extensive background research in technology and psychology.

Leslie released the first novel, Executive, in October 2011. Since then, she has written many more, continuing to break down barriers of traditional thrillers. Her style of fast-paced suspense, backed up by extensive background research in technology and psychology, has made Leslie one of the most read authors in the genre.

Reminiscent of the television drama Criminal Minds, her series of books featuring the fierce and relentless FBI Agent Tess Winnett would be of great interest to readers of James Patterson, Melinda Leigh, and David Baldacci crime thrillers. Fans of Kendra Elliot and Robert Dugoni suspenseful mysteries would love the Las Vegas Crime series, featuring the tension-filled relationship between Baxter and Holt. Finally, her Alex Hoffmann series of political and espionage action adventure will enthrall readers of Tom Clancy, Brad Thor, and Lee Child.

Leslie enjoys engaging with readers every day and would love to hear from you. Become an insider: gain early access to previews of Leslie’s new novels.

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